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Come to the Volunteer Magazine Mailing Party, Wednesday, February 25th at 6 pm at the T.A. Office (115 West 30th, #1207)! Free beer, pizza, soda, snacks and scintillating conversation. T.A. In the News Latest
T.A. News Events and Membership
Director Wanted Time on your hands? Eager to
make a difference? T.A. needs folks who are retired, work part-time or
between jobs to help our top-notch advocacy staff make the city a better place for bicyclists,
pedestrians and transit riders. Valet Bike Parking Volunteers Needed Volunteer to provide valet bike parking at events throughout the year. Register online to express your interest in this opportunity. T.A. still has two open internships:
- Advocacy
(work with T.A. program staff) Please visit transalt.org/intern for more information. Donations Wish List Help cycling and walking and get a tax deduction. Donate to T.A. We need: -Pentium II or better
PCs Contact Matt: info@transalt.org
Do Your Part for Safer Streets! Report: Potholes
and Hazards: Sidewalk
obstructions: Mayor’s Quality of Life Hotline at 888-677-LIFE/ Read more about T.A.'s work to reduce street hazards at transalt.org/haz Report Dangerous Cabs: 212-221-TAXI or report them online. Read more about T.A.'s work to make cabs safer for pedestrians and cyclists at transalt.org/cabs The T.A. Bulletin is a bi-weekly publication of Transportation Alternatives. The Bulletin has 26,000 subscribers. Transportation Alternatives is a 5,000-member NYC-area non-profit citizens group working for better bicycling, walking and public transit, and fewer cars. We work for safer, calmer neighborhood streets and car-free parks. Join T.A. today!
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After Death of Boys
1. Earmark $2.8 million in city capital funds in the upcoming budget to fast track the construction of the pedestrian safety improvements for 3rd and 4th Avenues recommended in the Downtown Brooklyn Traffic Calming Study.
4. Ask the DOT to move ahead with its excellent Safe Schools project, which looks at pedestrian safety around all 1,357 New York City schools. The DOT completed a $2.5 million planning study. But the agency has stalled on phase two of the project, which is building pedestrian safety engineering measures around the 35 most dangerous schools.
Thanks to the hundreds of you who sent e-mail to the mayor about this issue in response to our special appeal on February 10th. A sampling of your letters is available here. Good News: Big Decline in NYC Pedestrian Injuries over Decade
According to encouraging statistics compiled by the State Department of Motor Vehicles, pedestrian injuries in New York City declined significantly during the 1990s. The department’s records show that the number of pedestrians struck and injured by motorists on New York City streets declined from 15,589 in 1990 to 11,616 in 2000. When population growth is taken into account, this amounts to a 33% decline in pedestrian injuries over the decade. During the same period, the number of pedestrians killed dropped from 344 to 180 a year. While different government agencies report different crash statistics, all reflect the same downward trend in injuries. T.A. attributes the safety improvements to better focused police traffic enforcement, especially since the creation of TrafficStat in 1998, and efforts by the Department of Transportation to improve conditions at pedestrian "hot spots" including safety improvements at big, dangerous streets like the Grand Concourse, Queens Boulevard, Eastern Parkway and Herald Square. Bicycle and Pedestrian Deaths
Sources: Surface Transportation Policy Project and Transport for London Note: These figures do not take into account different levels of bicycling, walking or public transit use. So whereas New York City and Philadelphia have a similar death rate, given New York City’s much higher levels of walking and transit usage, the actual risk to pedestrians here is probably lower. A better comparison is London and New York City, which have very similar transportation profiles.
North Jersey Officials Call for GWB to River Road Connector Path
In November 2003, the Bergen County Board of Chosen Freeholders and the Borough
of Fort Lee Council bolstered the calls of fellow New Jersey elected officials
and civic groups by passing resolutions calling on the Port Authority and
Palisades Interstate Park to build a half-mile
Europe Eyes London Style Congestion Pricing
Elsewhere in Europe, studies by Deloitte consultants claim that 26 out of 34 cities in 15 European countries have shown "significant support" for some form of congestion charging. The World Bank is also reported to be pressing booming cities in developing countries to use congestion charging to curb exploding traffic growth, calling for cities in the developing countries to use congestion charges to reduce fast-growing car use, raise money for much-needed infrastructure and free up congested buses, which are traditionally the main form of mass transportation.
To the editor, T.A.’s year-end fund-raising appeals report a two-thirds fall in New York City pedestrian fatalities over the past 30 years, and we are, it seems, claiming this as "an historic victory." A good thing, certainly, but an historic victory? Alas, probably not.
T.A. acknowledges that the rate at which pedestrians and cyclists are struck (if not always killed) by cars and trucks in New York City hasn’t fallen nearly as much. Moreover, bicyclist deaths have stayed more or less the same. So how does it happen that pedestrians are still getting run down, but not dying quite so often? The most likely answer is simple: better emergency care. A U-Mass/Harvard Med School study, published in Homicide Studies in 2002, credited improved emergency care for the decline in the national homicide rate despite the proliferation of increasingly dangerous weapons and the rising incidence of criminal assault since 1960. As the New York Times summarized it, thanks to innovations such as the 911 telephone line and trauma units at hospitals, crime victims who formerly would have died and been counted as homicides are now surviving. The same phenomenon applies to traffic casualties, and is probably why pedestrian fatalities plummeted while the overall number of flattened pedestrians fell much less. It would be nice if we could declare victory, but the sad fact is that our efforts don’t seem to have made a huge dent in the underlying rate of endangerment by motor vehicles. I point this out, not to disparage T.A., still less to discourage its members and staff. But we have a long way to go before we can fairly claim to have rewritten the "equation on our streets." Charles Komanoff Editor’s Note: We do think T.A. is "changing" the equation on the streets. More specifically, street safety is getting better, but is not nearly where it should be or could be. Pedestrian safety in New York City is improving. The number of pedestrians struck and injured declined from 15,589 in 1989 to 11,616 in 2000. This reduction is made more impressive by the fact that the city’s population has grown 10% in this time. Adjusted for population, this means that pedestrian injuries have fallen one third since 1989. This reduction is not attributable to improvements in medical care, though improved medical care, including better ambulance response times, may explain in part why pedestrian deaths have fallen faster than injuries. On the other hand, the decline of pedestrian fatalities may also be the result of the fact that the police department and the DOT expend more effort reducing fatalities than injuries. We agree that cycling injuries remain troubling high, but given the increases in cycling over the decade, it seems likely that cycling safety has improved. How much safer is hard to tell. [an error occurred while processing this directive] Take Action
Advocacy Committeess Brooklyn@transalt.org Centralpark@transalt.org Gowanus@transalt.org Citywide: |
Mayor Says "Safety First on the SI Ferry"--How about City Streets? Dear Reader, In the last 90 years, 11 New Yorkers have been killed in a crash while riding the Staten Island ferry and at least 25,000 New Yorkers have been killed by motorists while walking or bicycling on city streets. Yet, the City’s response to the crash of the Staten Island ferry may be the model for how it should treat cycling and walking safety. Mayor Bloomberg and New York City Department of Transportation Commissioner Iris Weinshall moved decisively to implement ferry safety measures after last October’s ferry crash. The DOT hired professional safety investigators to "Thoroughly examine the ferry system, particularly with an eye towards policies and practices, particularly in the area of safety." The Mayor rightly said that the City "Owed it to the people who take the ferry each year and the memory of the people we lost last October to make sure the ferry is a safe, world class 21st century operation." But doesn’t the City owe the same level of attention to safety commitment to the millions of people who walk and bicycle city streets--especially given the magnitude of the City’s bicycling and pedestrian safety problems? At a recent press conference about ferry safety improvements, Commissioner Weinshall spoke about the DOT’s ferry operations, saying "An old system and environment which relied on tradition and practice will be replaced ... its deficiencies are all too clear and its time has come and gone." An external assessment of the DOT’s traffic engineering and traffic safety would likely reveal a similar need to introduce modern pedestrian and bicycling safety standards, policies and practices. Sincerely, P.S. As we went to press the Daily News reported the good news that NYC traffic deaths are at historic lows. Indeed they are, but cycling and walking deaths in NYC are still 17% higher than in London, and 15,000 cyclists and pedestrians are struck and hurt every year. If 15,000 people were injured on the subway every year, it would be declared a public health threat and shut down.
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Alternatives Magazine, our members-only in-depth quarterly
magazine— Selected articles
City Hall Needs Greenway Working Group
Innovative Designs Along the Manhattan Waterfront Greenway
Opportunity Knocks on 8th Ave: Two community boards support proposed bike lane
DOT Takes Second Look At Manhattan Bridge Access
New York City Pedestrian Fatalities at Historic Low
Speed Cameras Prove Huge Success in D.C.
What Germany and Holland Can Teach NYC About Bicycle and Pedestrian Safety TAKE
THE TOUR!
MAD AS HELL? DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!
Call the Mayor's Quality of Life Action Line (real people 24 hrs a day): 888-677-5433 or 888-677-LIFE. POTHOLES, STREET HAZARDS GOT YOU IN A RUT? Call DOT at 212-225-5368 and hit 0 to skip the message and speak with a
human. You can also report them online at transalt.org/ STAY SMART & INFORMED Savvy
transit riders get their lowdown on the subways here: Sensible
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What's your city council GET THERE! Check our maps page for links to NYC-area bicycle and transit maps. RIDES
AND WALKS
Tuesday,
February 24, 10 am. Central Park Laps. The Loeb Boathouse. The
Weekday Cyclists in NYC.
Friday,
February 27, 7 pm. Critical Mass. Union Square Park North. Time's Up!
Saturday,
February 28, 9 am. The Early Bird's Training Ride (Montauk Training
Series #0). Plaza Hotel.
5BBC. Saturday,
February 28, 9 am. Byram River Gorge. Jerome & Bainbridge Avenues, #4
Lexington Ave. Express to Woodlawn. Shorewalkers. Saturday,
February 28, 10 pm. Riverside Ride. Columbus Circle. Time's Up!
Sunday,
February 29, 9 am. Piermont. Central Park Boathouse. Fast
& Fabulous.
Sunday,
February 29, 9:30 am. The World's Greatest Pancakes: Frostbite Series
(13) Blowout! City Hall.
5BBC &
NYCC. Friday,
March 5, 10 pm. Central Park Moonlight Ride. Columbus Circle. Time's Up!
Saturday,
March 7, 9 am. Montauk Century Training Ride #1.
Plaza Hotel.
5BBC.
Sunday,
March 8, 9 am. Montauk Century Training Ride #2.
Cunningham Park.
5BBC. |
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